Author 



Y * 




o 
o 



Title 



i ir^S 



Class 



Book. 



Ia.. 



Imprint 



16—47372-1 GPO 



L I 



Bulletin No. 2. 



/THE INSTITUTE OF 
INTERNATIONAL EDUCATION 



BULLETIN 

FOR ADMINISTRATIVE AUTHORITIES OF 

UNIVERSITIES AND COLLEGES 




1 . Visiting Professors and Commissions 

2. Recently-Founded Traveling and Research Fellowships 

3. Foreign Professors Available for Teaching Engagements 

4. Research Opportunities Abroad for American Students 



NEW YORK 

1920 



NtiMsrail 



The Institute of International Education 

419 West 117th Street, New York 
Stephen P. Duggan, Ph.D. 



DIRECTOR 



Telephone: Morningside 7419 Cable Address: "Intered' 



ADMINISTRATIVE BOARD 

Herman V. Ames Paul Monroe 

L. H. Baekeland John Bassett Moore 

WilHam Lowe Bryan Henry Morgenthau 

Nicholas Murray Butler Dwight W. Morrow 

Charles Hopkins Clark E. H. Outerbridge 

Stephen Pierce Duggan Henry S. Pritchett 

Dr. Walter B. James William H. Schofield 

Alice Duer Miller Mary E. Woolley 

BUREAU DIVISIONS 

Europe Stephen P. Duggan 

Far East Paul Monroe 

Latin America Peter H, Goldsmith 

Women's Colleges Virginia Newcomb 

International Relations Clubs Margaret C. Alexander 






^b'^^ 



Institute of International Education 



PREFACE 

The Institute is desirous of keeping the administrative authorities 
of our colleges and universities informed of the presence of visiting 
scholars, educators and commirsions, partly for their information and 
partly because it has received requests to suggest distinguished foreign- 
ers who happen to be in the United States as commencement orators. 
Hence Part I of the bulletin. 

It is likewise desirable that the students of our institutions of higher 
education should have as full information as possible of fellowships 
which permit traveling or research in foreign countries. Part II gives 
information about some recently founded fellowships for American 
students abroad but does not claim to be exhaustive. Many of these 
fellowships have already been awarded for the next scholastic year. 
The information will be valuable, however, for the future. 

A number of inquiries have come to the Institute regarding the 
possibility of securing foreign teachers for lectureship or to fill tem- 
porary vacancies in our institutions. In order to discover the willing- 
ness of such teachers to come to the United States a questionnaire was 
issued by the American University Union in Great Britain and France. 
Part III of the bulletin gives the answers of those which are most 
definite as to time, place and subject. 

Many inquiries have come to the Institute from American students 
regarding research possibilities abroad, particularly in France and 
Great Britain. It may be said generally that the French universities 
will be able to accept American students in practically any numbers. 
This is also true of the provincial universities in Great Britain. Oxford 
and Cambridge are more crowded and cannot, therefore, receive 
students in all subjects. A resum6 of the answers received, particularly 
from the universities of Oxford, Cambridge and London, make up Part 
IV of the bulletin. 

A booklet entitled Opportunities for Higher Education in France 
has been distributed to all the accredited colleges and universities and 
to organizations interested in educational cooperation with France. 
A similar bulletin, giving fuller particulars of Opportunities for Graduate 
Study in the British Isles, has just come from the press and is in process 
of distribution. 

Stephen P. Duggan 
Director 



Institute of International Education 



PART I 

(a) Foreign Professors who will arrive in the United States this 
spring, and who will he open for lecture engagements 

Sir Geoffrey Btitler of Cambridge University 

Lecturer at Cambridge University on international law and author 
of A Handbook to the League of Nations. Associate of Mr. Balfour 
on the British High Commission to the United States. 

Sir Harry Reichel, LL.D., Vice Chancellor of the University of Wales 
He will be available for a certain number of lectures during the 
first three weeks of August. 
The subjects of his lectures: 

The Influence of Sea Power on History 

The Growth of the Turkish Power and its Relation to Western 
Civilization 

Mr. Graham Botha, Archivist of Cape Colony 
Available as commencement speaker 
Subject: The Union of South Africa 

Dr. W. van Bemmelen, Director of the Royal Magnetic and Meteorological 
Institute at Weltevreden, Batavia 
The Netherlands Minister announces that Dr. vanBemmelen is 
expected to arrive on the Pacific Coast the end of April and will prob- 
ably reach the East by the end of May. He will devote part of his 
stay here to the diffusion of knowledge of a scientific nature about the 
Netherland East Indies, more especially about the mountains and 
mountain ranges of the archipelago. He is on his way from Java to 
Holland. Dr. vanBemmelen will be glad to lecture without compen- 
sation. 

(b) Foreign Professors who will arrive in the United States this 

spring, not available for lectures 

A group of distinguished representatives of the medical profession 
from England, France, Scotland and Canada, arrived in New York on 
April 19, to study methods of medical education and particularly to be 
present at an examination given by the National Board of Medical 



Institute of International Education 



Examiners. They include Sir Humphrey Rolleston and Colonel H. J. 
Waring, appointed by the Royal College of Surgeons of England and 
also representing the Conjoint Examining Board of England; Dr. 
Norman Walker of Edinburgh, representing the Triple Qualifications 
Board of Scotland ; Professors Desmarais and Roussy of France, ap- 
pointed by the Faculty of Medicine, University of Paris, and Dr. J. C. 
Connell of the Dominion Council of Medicine of Canada. The Mission 
will visit the larger medical centers of the east and middle west and 
attend the meeting of the American Medical Association in New 
Orleans, arriving in Philadelphia at the examination of the National 
Board on May 19 to 26. 

Mr. Marc Peter, Swiss Minister to the United States, states that a 
Swiss Commission on Economic Studies, consisting of about sixty 
members, will come to the United States early in May. The Commis- 
sion will be made up mainly of persons interested in educational 
matters, who are desirous of making a study of the educational system, 
schools and libraries of this country. 

The Royal Institute of Public Health, London, has been invited to 
hold its Congress in Brussels from May 20 to May 24. The Council 
of the Royal Institute, in view of the obvious desirability of a closer 
relationship between the United States and Great Britain in the pro- 
motion of all health measures, has extended a cordial invitation to the 
universities of the United States, as well as to the municipal authori- 
ties and Learned Societies, medical and otherwise, interested in the 
various departments of public health and preventive medicine, to 
appoint delegates to the Congress. Professor William T. Sedgwick of 
the Massachusetts Institute of Technology will represent the Institute 
at this conference. 

The Swedish geologist. Baron De Geer, will come to this country 
this spring with a staff of assistants to make studies along the Hudson 
and other water beisins in an effort to determine the year-by-year 
retirement of the ice in the glacial period which he has already charted 
in Sweden. 



Institute of International Education 



PART II 

(a) Some Recently Founded Fellowships for American 
Students Abroad 

American-Scandinavian Foundation Fellowships 

20 fellowships (amount of each $i,ooo) for the annual interchange 
of students between the United States and Sweden, ten to Sweden 
and ten from Sweden. 

10 fellowships (amount of each $i,ooo) for the annual interchange 
of students between the United States and Denmark, five to 
Denmark and five from Denmark. 

10 fellowships (amount of each $i,ooo) for the annual interchange 
of students between the United States and Norway, five to Nor- 
way and five from Norway. 

Applications for these fellowships must be in by the 15th of March 
of each year. 

Information about these fellowships may be obtained by addressing 
Dr. H. G. Leach, Secretary, The American-Scandinavian Founda- 
tion, 25 West 45th Street, New York City. 

Amherst Memorial Fellowships 

2 fellowships for the study of social, economic and political institu- 
tions, at least half of the time to be spent in Europe. $2,000 each. 
Information about these fellowships may be obtained by 
addressing Mr. Walton H. Hamilton, Secretary of the Committee, 
Amherst College, Amherst, Massachusetts. 

Belgian Fellowships 

The Commission for Relief in Belgium is sponsor for an exchange 
fellowship plan for Belgian students between Belgian and American 
universities. It has already been arranged that two Belgian students 
will enter Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Leland Stanford, Jr. and Univer- 
sity of California next fall, and that these institutions have the right 
to nominate two Americans to go to Belgium for a year's study in the 
Universities of Brussels, Ghent, Liege, Louvain and the School of 
Mines at Mons. The Fellowship Committee of the Commission is 



Institute of International Education 



anxious to place two additional Belgian graduate students in another 
one of our larger institutions. 

The stipends of the fellowships in America will be $l,ooo and in 
Belgium 10,000 francs, and necessary traveling expenses. 

Information about these fellowships may be obtained by addressing 
Mr. Perrin C. Galpin, Acting Secretary, C. R. B. Fellowship Com- 
mittee, 115 Broadway, New York City. 

French Government Fellowships 

The French Government authorizes the selection of twenty Ameri- 
can girls for scholarships in leading lyc6es of France and six American 
girls for scholarships for graduate work at the Ecole Normale Sup^rieure 
de Sevres and the ficole Normale de Saint Germain for the academic 
year 1920-21. They cover fees, room and board. 

Information about these fellowships may be obtained by addressing 
Professor Margaret E. Mattby, 419 West 117th Street, New York 
City. 

Society for American Fellowships in French Universities 

25 fellowships to graduates of American colleges are granted for 
one year and renewable for a second year for advanced study and 
research in French universities. The annual value of each is $1,000. 

Information about these fellowships may be obtained by addressing 
Dr. I. L. Kandel, Secretary, 576 Fifth Avenue, New York City. 

(6) Fellowships not so recently founded hut about which there 
have been many inquiries 

Kahn Foundation for Foreign Travel of American Teachers 

The object of this foundation is to enable men of proved intellec- 
tual attainments to enjoy during one year or more, sufficient leisure 
and freedom from all professional pursuits or preoccupations to enter 
into personal contact with men and countries they might otherwise 
never have known. The annual stipend of the Kahn Fellowship is 
$3,000. The selection of the beneficiaries is left to the Trustees ap- 
pointed by the Founder in this country. 

Information about these fellowships may be obtained by addressing 
Mr. Frank D. Fackenthal, Secretary, Columbia University, New York 
City. 



Institute of International Education 



Pulitzer Scholarships 

3 traveling scholarships to graduates of the School of Journalism, 
Columbia University. 

An annual scholarship to the student of music in America who 
may be deemed the most talented and deserving, in order that he 
may continue his studies with the advantage of European instruction. 

An annual scholarship to an art student in America, who shall be 
certified as the most promising and deserving by the National Academy 
of Design. 

Information about these fellowships may be obtained by addressing 
Mr. Frank D. Fackenthal, Secretary, Columbia University, New York 
City. 



Institute of International Education 



PART III 

In reply to the question — "Would you be willing to accept a tem- 
porary engagement on the teaching stafif of a college or university in 
the United States, either at an early date, or within the next two or 
three years?" the following replies have been received: 

FROM GREAT BRITAIN 

Agriculture 

C. R. Fay, Fellow and Lecturer of Christ's College, Cambridge. 
Summer 192 1 

Social and Economic History of the 19th Century, History of 
British Agriculture 

C. A. Barber, Christ's College, Cambridge. Summer 1920 or 1921 
Tropical Agriculture 
Production of Tropical Raw Material 

James Hendrick, University of Aberdeen, Scotland. April to Sep- 
tember, 192 1 or 1922 
Lectures on the Fertilizer Industry and its development or on 
some other subject connected with fertilizers and their use 

Botany 
A. C. Seward, Master, Downing College, Cambridge. Summer 
Session only 
The Floras of the Past 
The Evolution of Plants 
Links with the Past in the Plant World 

Classics 

Alexander Souter, D.Litt., University of Aberdeen. March to 
September in any year 
Latin Literature and Language 
Greek New Testament, Text and Introduction 
Miss C. Keith, M.A., Classical Tutor, St. Hilda's Hall, Oxford. 
Summer Session, July-August 1920 
Textual and Literary Criticism 
Latin Prose Translation 



Institute of International Educa.ion 



Chemistry 

George Barger, Professor of Chemistry in Relation to Medicine, 

Edinburgh 

At present and for the next few years, at liberty from about 
March 25th to the end of September, July and August preferred. 
Would prefer to lecture at several institutions. 

Medical Chemistry 

Organic Chemistry 

Drugs 
H. B. Baker, Professor of Chemistry, Imperial College of Science, 

London. Not before 1922 

Inorganic Chemistry 

Unsolved problems in Inorganic Chemistry 

Foreign Affairs 

George Young, King's College, London. One term. 
Would prefer to lecture in several places. 
The German Revolution 
The Balkans 
Portugal 

The Ottoman Empire and the United States 
The League of Nations: International Diplomacy and Demo- 
cracy. 

Geography 

F. Debenham, Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge. Summer 
192 1 or 1922 
Surveying or Cartography Exploration 

Geology 

Alfred W. Gibb, University of Aberdeen. Summer Session 1921 or 
later 
Aspects of British Geology 

History 

James MacKinnon, Ph.D., D.D., University of Edinburgh. Sum- 
mer 192 1 or 1922 

Ecclesiastical History. The Reformation as Directed by Calvin 
or the History of Christianity in the 2nd or 3rd Centuries 

B. H. Sumner, All Soul's College, Oxford. February-June, 192 1. 
Summer 192 1 
West European History 
Russian History' 



10 Institute of International Education 

E. L. Woodward, All Soul's College, Oxford. Summer 192 1. Sep- 

tember-January 1922-23 

The History of the Later Roman Empire 

European History since Louis XIV 

F. M. Woodward, 11 Holywell, Oxford. Summer 1921. September- 

January 1922-23 

English History — Tudors 

English History — Stuarts i8th Century 

Miss Hilda Johnstone, University Reader in History, King's College, 
London. Summer sessions only, 1923 or 1924 
English Medieval History 
Miss Eileen Power, Girton College, Cambridge. September-January 
1920. February-August 1921. 
English Economic History 
Medieval European History 
European History, 19th Century 
Prefers not to spend entire time in one university. Would give 
courses of six lectures on (i) Medieval Women, (2) Chaucer's 
Prologue in Real Life, (3) Medieval Monasticism 
M. Cary, University College, London. Summer Session. 

English History, Ecclesiastical or Constitutional in the 14th 

and 1 6th Centuries 

The Political Ideal of the Middle Ages 

Literature 

B. W. Downs, M.A., Lecturer in Medieval and Modern Languages, 

Christ's College, Cambridge. September-January 1922-23 

English Literature 

Eighteenth Century Prose 

Tragedy in Medieval and Modern Times 
I. G. Robertson, Professor of German, University of London 

German Literature (i6th to i8th Century) or General Problems 

of Comparative Literature in the Eighteenth Century 
Miss Eleanor F. Jourdain, St. Hugh's College, Oxford. Summer 

Session. 

French Philosophy and Literature 

G. Milligan, University of Glasgow. Summer Session, next two or 

three years 

New Testament Language and Literature with special reference 

to recent papyrus discoveries 



Institute of International Education ii 

Alfred J. Wyatt, Emmanuel College, Cambridge. Summer Session 
192 1 

William Morris 
Chaucer-Dickens 
Shakespeare 
The Eighteenth Century 

Logic 

Dr. A. Wolf, Reader in Logic and Ethics, University College, London. 

One term or a whole session. Would like a year's notice 

Logic 

Philosophy 

History of Science 
Miss Helen Wodehouse, Professor of Education, University of 

Bristol. Cannot be absent from Bristol more than one term 

Logic 

Ethics 

General Psychology 

Principles and Problems of Education 

Machinery 

L. P. Smith, City and Guilds Engineering College, London. Sum- 
mer Session 
Electrical Machinery 

Mathematics 

Edgar Girard C. Poole, Queen's College, Oxford. Any time after 
March 1921 

Pathology 

L. S. Dudgeon, Professor of Pathology, St. Thomas's Hospital 
Medical School, London. June and July, 192 1 
Bacteriology, especially in relation to Medicine 

Pharmacology 
Arthur R. Gushing, University of Edinburgh. April-June, 1922-23 

Physiology 
W. M. Bayliss, Professor of General Physiology, University College, 

London. Summer Session 
A. V. Hill, University of Manchester. Summer Session 

Muscular Contraction 

Application of Physics to Vital Phenomena 



12 Institute of International Education 

Psychology 

C. E. Spearman, University College, London. Summer Session 
Differential Psychology 
Mental Energy 
The New Psychology on Principles 

Physics 

C. A. Darwin, Christ's College, Cambridge. February-June, 1923 
Mathematical Physics 

Telegraphy 

George William Osborn Howe, Assistant Professor of Electrical 
Engineering, Imperial College, London. Summer Session 
Radio- telegraphy 

FROM FRANCE 

Professo L, Hackspill Universite de Strasbourg 

Institut Chimique 

Je serais heureux d'aller faire une serie de conferences aux Etats- 
Unis de Septembre 1921 a Janvier 1922. 

Professeur de chimie minerale et industrielle, je pourrais faire dans 
chaque centre universitaire que je visiterais deux ou trois lemons sur 
les metaux alcalins et alcalino-terreux que j'ai specialement etudies 
au laboratoire, et quatre ou cinq legons sur la fixation de I'azote atmos- 
pherique et la fabrication des engrais azotes, question que j'ai toujours 
suivie de tres pres, en particulier en qualite de controleur des usines 
des territoires Rhenans de Janvier a Juillet 1919. Ces deux sujets 
interesseraient plutdt des etudiants assez avances que des debutants. 

Enfin je dois ajouter que je ne parle pas I'anglais, je comprends 
lorsqu'on me parle lentement et suis capable de lire un ouvrage scien- 
tifique anglais. 

Professor Grammont . . . Professeur de Grammaire comparee et 

de Linguistique generale a la Faculte 
des Lettres de I'Universite de Mont- 
pellier 
Je serais dispose a aller faire au mois de Septembre prochain une 

tournee de conferences dans un certain nombre d'Universites des 

Etats-Unis. 



Institute of International Education 13 

Void approximativement quels pourraient en etre les sujets: 

La poesie frangaise (Victor Hugo) 

La poesie frangaise (Alfred de Musset) 

Le phoneme et la syllabe (conference technique) 

Les phases successives des evolutions phonetiques (con- 
ference technique) 

Le rythme du vers frangais compare k celui de la prose 
frangaise 

Le mouvement musical de la pTirase frangaise 

Le rejet dans la versification frangaise 

En voila sept parmi lesquels on pourrait choisir. Je pense que six 
sufifiraient pour chaque Universite. 

Je dois faire observer qu'aucune de ces conferences n'a pour objet 
d'exposer des notions connues ou courantes; mais qu'elles reposent 
toutes uniquement sur mes travaux personnels et qu'elles sont absolu- 
ment neuves, comme les cinq premieres, sur lesquelles je n'ai encore 
rien publie — ou en grande partie neuves, comme les deux dernieres 
qui reposent sur des travaux que jen'ai encore publiesque partiellement. 

Je parle I'anglais, mais pas tres bien, et en tout cas pas assez bien 
pour donner une conference en anglais. 

Professor Georges Millardet . . . Professeur de Langues et 

Litt6ratures Romanes, a la 
Faculte des Lettres de Mont- 
pellier 

Je suis pr6t a accepter, k bref delai ou dans une periode comprise 
dans les trois prochaines annees, un engagement temporaire de trois ou 
quatre mois, de preference a partir de Septembre, dans une Universite 
ou College. 

De preference en Californie; mais aussi ailleurs dans I'Ouest, I'Est, 
ou le Centre. 

Matieres de mon enseignement: Linguistique romane (particuli^re- 
ment frangais, provengal, espagnol) ; dialectologie de la Gaule romane. 
Litteratures romanes (specialement frangaise et provengale, particu- 
lierement du moyen-age). Grammaire historique du Frangais 
(epoques ancienne et moderne). Phonetique experimental ; pro- 
nonciation et orthoepie. 

Je saurai parler anglais, mais pas suffisament pour donner un en- 
seignement en anglais. 



14 Institute of International Education 

Dr. L. M. Pautrier Professeur de clinique des 

Maladies cutanees et syphili- 

tiques 

Faculte de Strasbourg 

Strasbourg 

J'accepterais volontiers, dans un delai de i a 3 ans, une mission de 
6 a 8 semaines, pendant la session d'ete, Juillet-Septembre, dans une 
universite americaine (entre le 10 Juillet et le l^"" Octobre) 

Branche speciale enseignee : Dermatologie-Veneriologie 

Je parle I'anglais assez couramment. 

FROM INDIA 

Dr. Gilbert Slater, Professor of Economics in the University of 
Madras. Will lecture during May and the Summer Session, 192 1 
Indian Economics 

Professor S. L. Joshi, The College, Baroda, India. Wishes a per- 
manent position 
History, Literature, and Culture of India 



Addenda. Part III. 



PUBLIC HEALTH 



Miss Eileen O'Brien 

Bedford College, London Universit-y 
Sanitary Inspector with the Serbiar 

Fund in Serbia. 1919-1920. 
September 1920 or July and August, 
Would prefer to lecture in several 
Practical Sanitation for Women. 



Institute of International Education 15 



PART IV 

hi reply to the questions: 

1. Will you be willing to receive American graduate students in the 
coming academic year, and if so, how many? 

2. What research work, if any, will you offer during the coming aca- 
demic year for American graduate students, and in what subjects? 

we have received the following answers: 

Oxford University 

Magdalen College 

l'. I regret that this is not possible in the coming academic year." 

Exeter College 

1. "Yes, we could receive six graduate students." 

2. "Work for Bachelor of Letters or Science or for Ph.D. Degree." 

Trinity College 

I. "No, we have no room in college, being already much over our 
proper numbers." 
St. John's College 

I. "This must depend upon circumstances. In any event we 
have no vacancies before October and I cannot promise any- 
thing for that date." 

Kehle College 

I. "With the pressure on our rooms we could not receive such 
students in the coming year; we should be glad to be asked 
the question again in future years." 

Lincoln College 

I. "Yes, if we have vacancies, but it is not possible yet to foresee 
how many." 
All SouVs College 

1. "Yes." 

2. "Roman Law." 

Cambridge University 
King's College 

1. "Yes, a limited number." 

2. "Research work in all branches of Theology and History. 



1 6 Institute of International Education 

The School of Slavonics would be happy to receive American 
students and offers research in Slavonic languages, literature, 
history and economics." 

Pembroke College 
I. "No." 

Clare College 
I. "Yes." 

Downing College 

1. "We shall be glad to receive two." 

2. "Law, Botany and Medical subjects." 

Christ's College 

I. 'We have already accepted two or three American students 
for research work, but owing to the appallingly overcrowded 
state of our College we most regretfully cannot take more." 

St. John's College 

1. "We are willing to accept two students out of those who apply 
to us; subject to the usual conditions as to research students." 

2. "In any subject for which provision can be made in the Uni- 
versity." 

Corpus Christi College 

1. "Fifteen to twenty students." 

2. "Facilities for research work in Hygienics and Public Health, 
in Sanitary Science and Water Sewage, Food Stuff's, etc." 

Gonville and Caius College 

1. "Yes." 

2. "Comparative and Psychological Study of Religion, History 
and Archaeology of the Ancient Near East. Old Testament 
Criticism, Semitic Transcriptions and Comparative Grammar." 

Trinity College 

1. "Yes." 

2. "Two students in research work in Zoology, Engineering, 
Classics, Law." 

Emmanuel College 

1. "Yes." 

2. "Research work in any subject recognized by the University. 
But the University Laboratories of Engineering, Physics and 



histitute of International Education 17 

Chemistry will be much overcrowded for the next year. Others 
which will be very full are Botany, Agriculture and Physiology. 
This state of things arises from the war and will not be per- 
manent." 

Cambridge University Training College for Schoolmasters 

1. "Yes." 

2. "Types of English Schools. The Education Acts. Students 
can only be received if they are able to make all arrangements 
as to residence rooms, etc., for themselves, as this college has 
no hostel system. It is also desirable, if not essential, that the 
students should join a college." 

School of Agriculture 

1. "Yes, two or four." 

2. "Normal and pathological metabolism in animals in connec- 
tion with agriculture. Metabolism of bacteria." 

University of London 
St. John's Hall 

1. "Yes." 

2. "Philosophy, Hebrew, Classics." 

King's College 

1. "Yes." 

2. "History of Education." 

Francis Gallon Laboratory 

1. "Yes, up to eight postgraduates, four undergraduates." 

2. "Eugenics, Statistical Theory." 

University College. Sir Gregory Foster, the Provost writes: 

1. "Yes. Say fifty, if distributed among the several departments." 

2. "Research work is provided in every department of the College." 

Institute of Physiology 

1. "Two or three." 

2. "Research according to wishes and ability." 

New College 

1. "Yes, not more than four." 

2. "The Professors will guide the reading of students who take 
the M.A. or the Ph.D. of London University." 



InstiUUe of International Education 



Imperial College of Science and Technology 

1. "Yes." 

2. "Research work in Plant Physiology; Astronomical or General 
Spectroscopy; Cytology or Physiology of plants; Nitrogen 
Fixation; Velocity of Detonation of High Explosives; Energy 
Balances of High Explosives; Economic Entomology; Tech- 
nology, etc., of wood; Forest Botany; Geology, field or econo- 
mic; Paleontological research." 

City and Guilds Engineering College 

I. "Yes, a total of eight. Four in Electrical Machinery Design 
and four in Radio-telegraphy. 

London School of Economics 

1. "The London School of Economics does not wish to limit the 
number of qualified students whom it would be glad to wel- 
come." 

2. "In all subjects within the scope of the Faculty of Economics 
and Political Science, including Commerce and Industry." 

Birkbeck College 

1. "Yes, any number up to say, fifteen or twenty." 

2. "Preferably in Science, including Chemistry, Physics and 
Botany." 

University of Bristol 

1. "Yes, but the number will depend on the date at which they 
apply. Our accommodation is crowded at present, but will be 
considerably extended by next October." 

2. "Research in Physics, Chemistry, Geology, Botany, Zoology, 
Physiology, Human Morphology, Embryology, Pathology, Bac- 
teriology, and various branches of Engineering, as well as in 
Experimental Psychology." 

University of Manchester 

1. "Yes." 

2. "Physics, research in Spectroscopy; Germanic Philology and 
Old Germanic Literature; Bacteriology, Serology, General 
Pathology, and Morbid Histology, especially in connection 
with Complement Toxation and the Wassermann Reaction." 



Institute of International Education 19 

University of Edinburgh 

1. "Yes." 

2. "British History, or Modern European History (17th, i8th and 
19th Centuries); Astronomy; General Philosophy, History of 
Philosophy; Mathematics, chiefly Theory of Functions and 
Differential Equations and Mathematical Laboratory work, 
leading to the Ph.D., D.Sc. degrees of the University." 

University of Glasgow 

1. "Yes." 

2. "Research in Chemistry — organic, inorganic or physical; 
Metaphysics; Economics, etc." 

Royal Technical College, Glasgow 

I. "No. The great influx of students will prevent the reception 
of American graduate students in the coming academic year." 

Durham University 

Afi^liated Colleges, i. "Yes." 

FACILITIES FOR MEDICAL RESEARCH 

Hospital for Epilepsy and Paralysis, Maida Vale. 

1. "Yes." 

2. "Neurology and Psychology." 

National Hospital for Paralysed and Epileptic, Queen Square, 
London, W. C. 

1. "Yes, twenty." 

2. "Research work in Neurological Pathology. 

Queen Charlotte's Hospital, Marylebone, N. W. 
I. "Yes." 

Margaret Street Hospital for Consumption, 26 Margaret Street, 
W. London. 
I. "Yes." 



London (Royal Free Hospital) School of Medicine for Women, 
S. Hunter Street, W. C. i. 

1. "Yes, five." 

2. "Physiology and Pathology." 



20 Institute of International Education 

The Cancer Hospital, Fulham Road, S. W. 3. 

1. "Yes, fifty." 

2. "Research in Cancer and of Radio-activity and its Applica- 
tions." 

City of London Hospital, 86 Harley Street, W. 
I. "Yes." 

St. Thomas's Hospital, Albert Embankment, Westminster, S. W. i, 

1. "Yes, ten." 

2, "Any subject desired." 

National Hospital for Disease of the Heart, Westmoreland Street, 
London, W. i. 
I. "Yes." 



London School of Tropical Medicine. 
I. "Yes." 

Royal Westminster Ophthalmic Hospital. 

1. "About twelve." 

2. "Pathology." 

Royal National Orthopedic Hospital. 
I. "Yes." 

The Samaritan Free Hospital. 

1. "Yes." 

2. "Chemistry." 

London Temperance Hospital, Hampstead Road, London, N. W. 

1. "Yes, three." 

2. "Clinic in Oto-Laryngology." 

The London Lock Hospital. 
I. "Yes, up to fifty." 

Victoria Hospital for Children. 

I. "Yes." 

City of London Hospital for Diseases of the Chest, Victoria, N. E. 

1. "Yes, two." 

2. "Phthisic and other lung diseases." 



Institute of International Education 21 

The University of Strasbourg sends the following invitation to 
Americans: 

"We shall be ready during the summer vacation to welcome here 
and to accommodate any number of students wishing to avail 
themselves of the opportunity offered for studying French, German, 
European literature and history. Special courses for undergrad- 
uates will be organized. There will also be courses for advanced 
students able to follow French courses in letters, chemistry and 
physics, medicine and surgery, geology, botanies, etc." 



The Institute of International Education 



ADVISORY COUNCIL 



Addams, Jane 
Alderman, President Edwin 
Ames, Dean Herman V. 
Andrews, Fanny Fern 
Biggs, Dr. Herman 
Blakeslee, Professor G. H. 
Brookings, Robert S. 
Bruere, Henry 
Bull, Dr. Carroll G. 
Burton, President M. L. 
Byrne, James 

Coolidge, Professor Archibald 
Cravath, Paul D. 
Cunliffe, Professor J. W. 
Davis, Katherine B. 
Downer, Professor Charles A. 
Ely, Professor Richard T. 
Filene, A. Lincoln 
Finley, Dr. John H. 
Fosdick, Dr. Harry E. 
Gilbert, Cass 
Gildersleeve, Dean V. C. 
Goodnow, President F. J. 
Hadley, President A. T. 
Hale, Dr. George E. 
Harrington, Governor E. C. 
Hazen, Professor Charles D. 
Hibben, President J. G. 
Howe, Professor Henry M. 
Hughes, Hon. Charles E. 
Jenks, Professor Jeremiah 
Judson, President H. P. 
Keppel, Frederick P. 
Keyser, Professor C. J. 
Lovett, President Edgar 
Lowell, President A. L. 
MacCracken, President H. N. 



Mali, Pierre 

Main, President J. H. T. 
Mannes, David 
Marling, Alfred E. 
Meiklejohn, President A. 
MilHken, Professor R. A. 
Moore, Professor E. H. 
Morgan, William Fellowes 
Neilson, President W. A. 
Noyes, Professor Arthur A. 
Payne, President Bruce R. 
Pendleton, President Ellen T. 
Pupin, Professor Michael I, 
Putnam, Herbert 
Richardson, Dr. E. C. 
Robinson, Dr. Edward 
Sachs, Professor Julius 
Salmon, Dr. Thomas W. 
Schwedtman, Ferdinand C. 
Severance, Mrs. C. A. 
ShankHn, President W. A. 
Shorey, Professor Paul 
Shotwell, Professor J. T. 
Showerman, Professor Grant 
Stimson, Henry L. 
Stokes, Dr. Anson Phelps 
Storey, Professor Thomas A. 
Suzzallo, President Henry 
Thomas, President M. Carey 
Todd, Professor Henry A. 
Townsend, Hon. John G. 
Vincent, Dr. George E. 
Wald, Lillian D. 
White, Professor Henry C. 
Wilkins, Professor Ernest 
Wilson, Professor George G. 
Woodbridge, Dean F. J. E. 



Woolley, President Mary E. 






'ii'^b 



LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 



019 725 840 8 



